S2 Ep. 11: Letter Never Sent (1959, Mikhail Kalatozov)

February 12
1h 36m

Episode Description

The Cold War Cinema team, Jason Christian, Anthony Ballas, and Paul T. Klein, return to discuss Mikhail Kalatozov's 1959 drama Letter Never Sent

Synopsis of the film: Four geologists descend on the Siberian Taiga. Over the course of a backbreaking summer sifting minerals in the icy, rushing waters of boreal rivers, the group–the experienced guide, Konstantin, a young couple, Andrei and Tanya, and the brooding Sergei–search for diamond deposits to enrich themselves and their country. Throughout, Konstanin writes an extended letter home to his wife Vera. Sergei, too, writes a letter, though never meant to be read, expressing his jealousy and Andrei and love for Tanya. When a massive forest fire breaks out, however, the group must work together to survive, not only the blaze, but the ravages of the elements and the fast-approaching and deadly Siberian winter…

On this episode we discuss:

  • The unbelievable production of a film shot on location in the USSR taiga. 
  • How the film reflects the tenents of socialist realism in complex and creative ways. 
  • How the film shares many of the sensibilites of the western genre and pairs nicely with John Ford's The Searchers in this regard. 
  • The basic theoretical aspects of scientific socialism and how the filmmaker uses them to shape the film's narrative and themes. 
  • The allegorical use of a diamond in the Soviet context versus the same in the capitalist West. 

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We love to give book or film recommendations on the podcast, so here are ours for this episode: 

Paul: Two "Northwesterns": Bend of the River (Anthony Mann, 1952) and River of No Return (Otto Preminger, 1954)

Tony: Tacky's Revolt: The Story of an Atlantic Slave War by Vincent Brown

Jason: Nail in the Boot (Mikhail Kalatozov, 1931) and Socialism: Utopian and Scientific by Friedrich Engels

Also, check out this fascinating interview on the Actually Existing Socialism podcast with the scholar Sardana Nikolaeva, who studies the Indigenous peoples of the northern regions of the Soviet Union (and present-day Russia) and their connection to the diamond mines that are imagined in the film. 

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 For more from your hosts and guest:

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Logo by Jason Christian 

Theme music by DYAD (Charles Ballas and Jeremy Averitt). 

Happy listening!

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